• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan

scottbass71

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 7, 2003
Messages
850
Location
Melbourne, Australia
I was pondering (very frightening I know!!) why don't they make fretless basses out of Maple ?
I know EB use Pau Ferro but have seen a few 70s F$%nders with Maple boards
and I know of one Pre-eb ( on Ebay) that had a maple.

Is it sound wise or density of the wood ?

Also last Q what is used for the line markings on the EB lined fretlesses

thanks

scott
 

Aussie Mark

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2003
Messages
5,646
Location
Sydney, Australia
I don't think there's any engineering reason for not using maple necks for fretless basses. I suspect that the hardness of the maple might not give the warm tone that many fretless players seek. Having said that, you are correct that Fender did make some maple fretless Precisions (and they look great).
 

bassmonkeee

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 25, 2004
Messages
4,628
Location
Decatur, GA
scottbass71 said:
Thanks guys for all the replys
Yeah mark I must admit Pbasses with maple boards do look good - pity they sound bad!!!

I dunno. My old 76 fretless PBass sounded pretty damn good. It was pretty to look at, too.

That said, I sold it when I got my fretless Bongo since I knew it would never get played live, again. :D
 

smallequestrian

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 10, 2005
Messages
1,476
Location
Chicagoland
The conventional reasoning is that maple wears down quicker than Pau Ferro or Ebony. Also it does add some brightness which probably balances out nicely the sound of a P pickup.
 

Golem

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 30, 2005
Messages
2,293
Location
My Place
I've got a LightWave Saber [so sue them ...] with a Maple FB, and the LightWave system is very-very krispee and kleen in tone. It's so skwinky kleen that they added this switch, I call it the "P-Bass Switch", to make it sound more 'mainstream' when needed. I play Acousticores on it, so the maple is only subjected to very light pressure [although they are RWs].

Too bad Jaco didn't just happen to have a maple fretboard when he set the precedent. Epoxy on maple? Yowza. I have an extra finish coat on my LightWave [not epoxy tho'] so I have some sense of that result.

As to maple being harder and brighter than rosewood, isn't the pua ferro on my Ray a harder brighter version of rosewood? It stays quite shiny and barely scuffs at all. Sounds plenty hot, even with a BassLines PU and preamp [me likey].
 

Father Gino

Well-known member
Joined
May 19, 2005
Messages
219
Those Maple basses do look kewl. Maybe just because they're fairly rare.

If you want to make your fretless MM look cool, put black strings on an unlined board with a dark body like blue pearl (?) What's the real dark metallic blue that almost looks black in some light? anyway, that looks pretty cool to me.
 
Top Bottom